Geoffrey Milsom of Consulting Firm enVista Offers Other Ideas to Take Out Freight Costs
In his First Thoughts column last week, SCDigest editor Dan Gilmore offered a number of ideas – some of them a bit out of the box – for reducing transportation costs. (See Smart Ideas for Reducing Transport Costs.)
Of course, soaring transportation costs are playing havoc with logistics budgets and even corporate profits, with a growign number of companies citing cost and capacity issues as impacting the bottom line.
Supply Chain Digest Says…
A constant struggle is understanding true fleet costs compared to truckload pricing contracts, but that aside, levering the fleet is most often the lower cost option.
What do you say?
Click here to send us your comments
Click here to see reader feedback
One idea Gilmore cited in his column came from Geoffrey Milsom, a senior director at consulting firm enVista. That idea – relative to balancing spot and contract market usage – was actually one of a number of good ideas Milson provided via email.
Here are the rest:
Strategic Ideas
General Conversations: We have been asked by several very large shippers recently to help them address the rising (and theoretically) unavoidable cost increases in transportation, particularly in the truckload segment, on how they can address the rising costs due to the capacity crunch.
Our short answer is that you cannot beat the market on an on-going basis, but you can focus on “moving freight differently” and re-thinking your sourcing strategies, optimization, modal-shift, TMS-supported processes, carrier relationships, and the operation things that follow. The longer answer involves not asking us to provide an outlook to predict the truckload market trends to tell the CFO that this broader market issues are unsolvable at the shipper level.
Network Design: The number 1 driver of transportation cost is the location of facilities (suppliers, DCs, and customers). While moving these, particularly for manufacturing, is very difficult, the lane pairs, mileage, and associated cost models (specific to LTL and parcel) creates a larger cost gap than just the modal decision once these points are fixed. The decision on where to put a facility then requires baking in more than just transportation cost (labor, real estate, inventory, etc.), though calculating these in unison can drive the most optimal total landed cost to the customer, while also adding in the service component, which has been disrupted by Amazon and other on-line only retailers.
Operational/Tactical
Tactical Sourcing: We have been working with shippers across several verticals this year on how to tactically source lanes, with and without TMSs implemented. We have found, through analyzing their historical truckload shipment data compared to market spot and market contract rates, that shippers have a very hard time establishing the optimal mix on their lanes.
What this means is they “play” in the spot market when they shouldn’t, and don’t when they should. It’s unrealistic for any shipper to achieve the optimal mix (hindsight being 20/20), but our shipper clients have a tendency to miss by greater than 50% of the time. The point of the story is that if shippers can move to a more real-time understanding of the markets, supported by strong process design plus strong TMS applications, they can do a better job mitigating their cost increases.